In West Mills
by De'Shawn Charles Winslow
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For readers of The Twelve Tribes of Hattie and The Turner House , an intimately told story about a woman living by her own rules and the rural community that struggles to understand her. Azalea "Knot" Centre is determined to live life as she pleases. Let the people of West Mills say what they will; the neighbors' gossip won't keep Knot from what she loves best: cheap moonshine, nineteenth-century literature, and the company of men. And yet, Knot is starting to learn that her freedom comes at show more a high price. Alone in her one-room shack, ostracized from her relatives and cut off from her hometown, Knot turns to her neighbor, Otis Lee Loving, in search of some semblance of family and home. Otis Lee is eager to help. A lifelong fixer, Otis Lee is determined to steer his friends and family away from decisions that will cause them heartache and ridicule. After his failed attempt as a teenager to help his older sister, Otis Lee discovers a possible path to redemption in the chaos Knot brings to his doorstep. But while he's busy trying to fix Knot's life, Otis Lee finds himself powerless to repair the many troubles within his own family, as the long-buried secrets of his troubled past begin to come to light. Set in an African American community in rural North Carolina from 1941 to 1987, In West Mills is a magnificent, big-hearted small-town story about family, friendship, storytelling, and the redemptive power of love. show lessTags
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Member Reviews
Otis Lee can't help but care about the people around him in his community in North Carolina, and his care extends to his neighbor Azalea "Knot" Centre. Knot is the schoolteacher and she's a good one, but she's also prone to indulging in books, booze and men, but especially the booze. Otis helps her out each time her behavior lands her in trouble, accepting her as she is. In West Mills begins in 1941 and continues through most of the lifespans of Otis, Knot and the various denizens of West Mills], through the changing social conditions, as life in West Mills changes and remains constant, as people leave and return.
This is a novel about secrets, and how they are kept or not kept by an entire community or within families. It's about who show more has the right or the responsibility to reveal what has been hidden. It's also a deeply nuanced look at a few people in a community over time, how proximity can create deep ties and how the past impacts the present. Otis Lee is a wonderful character whose sense of responsibility is both a strength and a liability. Winslow writes well and with love about his fictitious community and I enjoyed every page I got to spend with Knot, Otis, Pen, Breezy and the rest. show less
This is a novel about secrets, and how they are kept or not kept by an entire community or within families. It's about who show more has the right or the responsibility to reveal what has been hidden. It's also a deeply nuanced look at a few people in a community over time, how proximity can create deep ties and how the past impacts the present. Otis Lee is a wonderful character whose sense of responsibility is both a strength and a liability. Winslow writes well and with love about his fictitious community and I enjoyed every page I got to spend with Knot, Otis, Pen, Breezy and the rest. show less
This could be my favorite novel of the year so far (okay, okay - I probably have said that a few times). But this story is THE REAL DEAL. If anyone tells you that men can't write women, give them this title to read. The plot centers on Knot, an African American woman living on her own in a small North Carolina country town alongside her devoted neighbors Otis Lee and his wife Pep. All families have their secrets, and from 1941 until 1987, this trio holds theirs close. What makes this book so special is the leisurely unwinding of days - going “up bridge” to the general store, evening gatherings on the porch, secret births and hidden deaths, horrible betrayals and abrupt confessions, all told through the inner thoughts and the musical show more dialogue of these profoundly believable people. The outer world and its problems - wars, Jim Crow, and the slow crawl of progress - are hardly a factor. Here, through the pen of an amazingly skilled writer, the confinement to West Mills is just fine. Each of the trio, and the well-drawn secondary characters, act in both expected and surprising ways, make smart and dumb decisions, and it's hardly bearable when it all comes to an end. show less
"No more secrets. The longer they're kept, the more hurt they cause when they're set free."
De'Shawn Charles Winslow blew me away with In West Mills, his debut novel. It has small town, Southern vibes, friendships to envy, family and community secrets and a variety of characters that you will fall in love with. My favorite character was Knot, a strong willed, book lover who lives life on her own terms and doesn't care for anyone else's opinions on her lifestyle. Some of her decisions made me want to shake her but I loved her strength of conviction and how unapologetic she was about her own identity. Underneath her tough exterior she did have a caring heart that allowed for some deep friendships to form and for some redemption to occur. I show more only wish I knew just a little bit more about her back story.
Winslow knows how to write a multi-layered story that keeps you interested until the very end. The array of characters you meet are fully, fleshed out. Their perspectives are all unique and their original voices add depth to the story. By the end of this novel, I felt like I had a sense of the essence of the town of West Mills. The history woven into the story added context but never made the story feel too heavy. In essence, In West Mills is a breath of fresh air because of the great storytelling.
At the core of the novel is the idea of keeping secrets, especially in small towns. Winslow explores the repercussions of keeping them but leaves room to explore the idea that sometimes secrets protect people.
This novel left me with questions to explore more:
🤫 Who benefits from secret keeping since there is a power dynamic involved?
🤫 Do lies ever really protect someone?
🤫 What drives people to keep secrets when doing so requires so much work?
🤫 Is there something about small towns that force people to keep secrets more?
🤫 How do you decide what secrets are harmful?
🤫 Is a requirement of friendship the ability to keep secrets?
🤫 Does keeping secrets harm or further bond people together?
🤫 How do you decide when secrets should be revealed?
This book was a gem and exactly what I needed to get out of a slump.
Bookdragon rating 4.5 🔥🔥🔥🔥 show less
De'Shawn Charles Winslow blew me away with In West Mills, his debut novel. It has small town, Southern vibes, friendships to envy, family and community secrets and a variety of characters that you will fall in love with. My favorite character was Knot, a strong willed, book lover who lives life on her own terms and doesn't care for anyone else's opinions on her lifestyle. Some of her decisions made me want to shake her but I loved her strength of conviction and how unapologetic she was about her own identity. Underneath her tough exterior she did have a caring heart that allowed for some deep friendships to form and for some redemption to occur. I show more only wish I knew just a little bit more about her back story.
Winslow knows how to write a multi-layered story that keeps you interested until the very end. The array of characters you meet are fully, fleshed out. Their perspectives are all unique and their original voices add depth to the story. By the end of this novel, I felt like I had a sense of the essence of the town of West Mills. The history woven into the story added context but never made the story feel too heavy. In essence, In West Mills is a breath of fresh air because of the great storytelling.
At the core of the novel is the idea of keeping secrets, especially in small towns. Winslow explores the repercussions of keeping them but leaves room to explore the idea that sometimes secrets protect people.
This novel left me with questions to explore more:
🤫 Who benefits from secret keeping since there is a power dynamic involved?
🤫 Do lies ever really protect someone?
🤫 What drives people to keep secrets when doing so requires so much work?
🤫 Is there something about small towns that force people to keep secrets more?
🤫 How do you decide what secrets are harmful?
🤫 Is a requirement of friendship the ability to keep secrets?
🤫 Does keeping secrets harm or further bond people together?
🤫 How do you decide when secrets should be revealed?
This book was a gem and exactly what I needed to get out of a slump.
Bookdragon rating 4.5 🔥🔥🔥🔥 show less
In West Mills follows an African American community in rural North Carolina across the decades. In fiction, we often imagine stories as journeys, but this novel is about people who've found their home in one place, and in each other. It's a funny, accessible, profound novel, and its author writes about flawed characters and hard times with great tenderness.
Living as a transplant in the South, the past often feels like a foreign country, paved over by economic displacement and the unresolved trauma of Jim Crow. I see glimpses of West Mills in falling-down country stores, in secondhand stories of life before indoor plumbing, in African American high school yearbooks, in the local radio station that—in the year of our lord show more 2019—broadcast black and white death notices at different times of day.
Against the erosion of memory, this novel is time travel, an act of reclamation. Highly recommended. show less
Living as a transplant in the South, the past often feels like a foreign country, paved over by economic displacement and the unresolved trauma of Jim Crow. I see glimpses of West Mills in falling-down country stores, in secondhand stories of life before indoor plumbing, in African American high school yearbooks, in the local radio station that—in the year of our lord show more 2019—broadcast black and white death notices at different times of day.
Against the erosion of memory, this novel is time travel, an act of reclamation. Highly recommended. show less
De’Shawn Charles Winslow’s In West Mills is not at all the kind of novel that would usually grab my attention – not even close. But back in the good old days, sometime during March 2020, on my very last visit to a brick and mortar bookstore before virus-hell suddenly broke out all around the world, I spotted a copy on a display table near the store’s front door. Looking now at the book’s front cover, I’m still not sure why I stopped to pick it up, but I’m grateful that I did because this 2019 debut novel has become one of my favorite reads of 2020.
The book’s main character is Azalea Knot Centre, a brand-new schoolteacher who has come to little West Mills, North Carolina, in the early 1940s to school the town’s black show more children in their separate, but hardly equal, schoolhouse. “Knot,” as she becomes known to the black community, is not a typical starry-eyed young teacher, however. She is most definitely her own woman, and she doesn’t care who knows it or resents her for being it. Oh, Knot enjoys teaching well enough, but her three great loves in life are really good moonshine liquor, men, and 19th century literature (especially Charles Dickens novels), pretty much in that order.
Obviously, two of her three main loves, especially when experienced together, have a tendency to get free-spirited women like Knot into a lot of trouble (hint: Great Expectations is not part of the problem). Knot’s lifestyle did not much lend itself to teaching school in the first place, so when the inevitable finally happens, and she finds herself pregnant, her days in the classroom are destined for an early end. Knot simply cannot see herself as wife-material, much less as someone qualified to raise a child, but she knows she will have to give birth to the baby because, “As scared as Knot was of being someone’s mother, she was more scared of dying on some old woman’s kitchen table, trying to avoid becoming someone’s mother.”
Right now, marriage and motherhood may just be the last two things she wants, or needs, in her life:
“Knowing that she wasn’t ready didn’t mean she liked not being ready. But it felt safe to her – the only kind of safe Knot felt all right with. Safe by not having to worry about hurting a child’s feelings, the way her mother had hurt hers. Safe by not becoming someone’s wife just to figure out, years later, that she didn’t want him. Safe to get a bit of joy from the moonshine – something that couldn’t hurt her or be hurt by her.”
But with a little help from her friends, especially neighbor Otis Lee Loving, Knot Centre creates a nice little life for herself in West Mills, North Carolina. As it turns out, in fact, this woman who spent most of her life living all alone, will have as great an impact on the lives of the citizens of West Mills as most anyone who ever lived there.
Bottom Line: In West Mills may be De’Shawn Charles Winslow’s debut novel, but it certainly doesn’t read much like an author’s first book. The novel spans the years 1941-1987, and it is great fun to watch its colorful cast of characters age and mature over the decades as West Mills itself evolves. There is a lot going on in this one, especially with the complicated relationships that develop between the main characters, but it would be unwise to risk inadvertently revealing a major spoiler or two by saying much more about the plot. This is one you need to experience for yourself in order to get the most out of it. show less
The book’s main character is Azalea Knot Centre, a brand-new schoolteacher who has come to little West Mills, North Carolina, in the early 1940s to school the town’s black show more children in their separate, but hardly equal, schoolhouse. “Knot,” as she becomes known to the black community, is not a typical starry-eyed young teacher, however. She is most definitely her own woman, and she doesn’t care who knows it or resents her for being it. Oh, Knot enjoys teaching well enough, but her three great loves in life are really good moonshine liquor, men, and 19th century literature (especially Charles Dickens novels), pretty much in that order.
Obviously, two of her three main loves, especially when experienced together, have a tendency to get free-spirited women like Knot into a lot of trouble (hint: Great Expectations is not part of the problem). Knot’s lifestyle did not much lend itself to teaching school in the first place, so when the inevitable finally happens, and she finds herself pregnant, her days in the classroom are destined for an early end. Knot simply cannot see herself as wife-material, much less as someone qualified to raise a child, but she knows she will have to give birth to the baby because, “As scared as Knot was of being someone’s mother, she was more scared of dying on some old woman’s kitchen table, trying to avoid becoming someone’s mother.”
Right now, marriage and motherhood may just be the last two things she wants, or needs, in her life:
“Knowing that she wasn’t ready didn’t mean she liked not being ready. But it felt safe to her – the only kind of safe Knot felt all right with. Safe by not having to worry about hurting a child’s feelings, the way her mother had hurt hers. Safe by not becoming someone’s wife just to figure out, years later, that she didn’t want him. Safe to get a bit of joy from the moonshine – something that couldn’t hurt her or be hurt by her.”
But with a little help from her friends, especially neighbor Otis Lee Loving, Knot Centre creates a nice little life for herself in West Mills, North Carolina. As it turns out, in fact, this woman who spent most of her life living all alone, will have as great an impact on the lives of the citizens of West Mills as most anyone who ever lived there.
Bottom Line: In West Mills may be De’Shawn Charles Winslow’s debut novel, but it certainly doesn’t read much like an author’s first book. The novel spans the years 1941-1987, and it is great fun to watch its colorful cast of characters age and mature over the decades as West Mills itself evolves. There is a lot going on in this one, especially with the complicated relationships that develop between the main characters, but it would be unwise to risk inadvertently revealing a major spoiler or two by saying much more about the plot. This is one you need to experience for yourself in order to get the most out of it. show less
What a wonderful time to read a story about authentic characters!! This book reminded me about how secrets can divide and shatter familial love. I feel in love with Azalea Knot Centre, the complex heroine of this book. She is a strong, individual that left her mark on her community. The prevailing themes of loss and loneliness hit me deep. I was captive by Knot's honesty as well as her relationship with her father. If one line describes this book, it's bravery.
It's a bravery narrative about how knots exist between human connection. I believe it belongs in the list of required university readings for Contemporary American Literature.
Winslow explores how the definition of family and loyalty changes, matures, ebbs, and flows with moving show more of time. It allowed me to ask myself painful questions about why parents make sweeping decisions for their young children. It enlarged my vision in terms of discussion what "doing the best I can" means in terms of caring for others.
There are egos in this one. Winslow does a great job balancing pain, sacrifice, forgiveness, and betrayal into an entertaining novel full of generational conflict. But truth endures and the characters do not remain static. show less
It's a bravery narrative about how knots exist between human connection. I believe it belongs in the list of required university readings for Contemporary American Literature.
Winslow explores how the definition of family and loyalty changes, matures, ebbs, and flows with moving show more of time. It allowed me to ask myself painful questions about why parents make sweeping decisions for their young children. It enlarged my vision in terms of discussion what "doing the best I can" means in terms of caring for others.
There are egos in this one. Winslow does a great job balancing pain, sacrifice, forgiveness, and betrayal into an entertaining novel full of generational conflict. But truth endures and the characters do not remain static. show less
Following the lives of a group of people in North Carolina, West Mills, the book opens with a young woman telling her boyfriend to get out. Meet Azalea, nicknamed Knot, a hard drinking, hard loving woman, who wants to live her life, her way. Took a while for me to warm up to her. I definitely don't approve of many things she does,, but by books end, despite her abrasivesness, she won me over. The book takes place over four decades in this black community, set in the 1940s, a time when unwed pregnancies were looked down on. When a family disowns one, there is no other choice but to live alone, or to make a new family from the friends one has. The other residents all have their own problems, but I came to pretty much like all of them.
The show more characters have many secrets, secrets we know and others know, but not the one to which the secret applies. That creates the tension in the story and between the characters.
As Knot says, "No more secrets. The longer they're kept, the more hurt they cause when they're set free.".
There is plenty of hurt here, but support and friendship, loving and forgiveness, as well. A debut novel with a great deal of pathos and passion. Reminded me of a young Angelou or Morrison.
ARC from Bloomsbury Publishing and Netgalley. show less
The show more characters have many secrets, secrets we know and others know, but not the one to which the secret applies. That creates the tension in the story and between the characters.
As Knot says, "No more secrets. The longer they're kept, the more hurt they cause when they're set free.".
There is plenty of hurt here, but support and friendship, loving and forgiveness, as well. A debut novel with a great deal of pathos and passion. Reminded me of a young Angelou or Morrison.
ARC from Bloomsbury Publishing and Netgalley. show less
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